15 Minute Yiddish (more or less) 103

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  • Опубликовано: 3 фев 2025

Комментарии • 132

  • @erisjola5857
    @erisjola5857 2 года назад +74

    As a German speaker I am shocked by how well I can understand what you were saying in Yiddish
    Love from Austria 🇦🇹

    • @skipfuego6339
      @skipfuego6339 2 года назад +4

      So, learn the language... Y'all Germans and Portuguese people always say you understand something,but can't speak a lick

    • @erisjola5857
      @erisjola5857 2 года назад +6

      I’m confused. Please explain what you mean. Are you complaining? I genuinely can’t tell

    • @eberdemelos.j9770
      @eberdemelos.j9770 2 года назад +7

      @@skipfuego6339 Portuguese isn't intelligible with Yiddish! Maybe it can be with Spanish, Ladino or Galician. But not with Yiddish.

    • @skipfuego6339
      @skipfuego6339 2 года назад +1

      @@eberdemelos.j9770 I never said it could be intelligible. I said Portuguese and German "people" I'm not talking about the language. Always talking as if you understand the language but never have these languages as a secondary or can't have a basic conversation in those languages

    • @TheTrueAmaghedon
      @TheTrueAmaghedon 2 года назад

      @@skipfuego6339 the fuck is your problem, lol

  • @barcher
    @barcher 4 года назад +28

    Brilliant. And funny.

  • @aquil26
    @aquil26 4 года назад +37

    I LOVE the characters!! this class is so much fun

  • @canal_changeling
    @canal_changeling 2 года назад +7

    The thought and planning that went into these videos make them memorable. Also the sincerity of the presenter.

  • @hoffthechain3653
    @hoffthechain3653 2 года назад +4

    I’m so glad I just found this! What a WONDERFUL RESOURCE!

  • @arrayindexoutofboundsexcep1088
    @arrayindexoutofboundsexcep1088 2 года назад +17

    As a German I understood 90%

  • @carolt.7674
    @carolt.7674 2 года назад +3

    I LOVE THIS! A Gentile learning Yiddish! Oy! A dank!

  • @Nobody-ev6cl
    @Nobody-ev6cl 3 года назад +6

    Omg! These are soooo good! I'm having so much fun learning from these videos. 😍

  • @kennyinliverpool
    @kennyinliverpool 2 года назад +5

    I think I'm going to become slightly obsessed with these videos!

  • @dannylojkovic9680
    @dannylojkovic9680 2 года назад +12

    I am an advanced German learner and I am so surprised at how much I know. This language is insanely interesting! I love seeing how this language clearly developed out of what we now know as German. Although, I have heard there are numerous dialects of Yiddish, some that are more Germanic and others that are more Slavic. Regardless, great video!

    • @dannylojkovic9680
      @dannylojkovic9680 2 года назад +4

      Just wanted to add, that "Zeyer Ayngenem" is very similar to saying in German "sehr angenehm" or "very pleasant." That is also what you say in Russian. "Ochen priyatna" (very pleasant). In German, however, you say "schön dich kennenzulernen!" (nice/beautiful to get to know you!)

    • @wolfvonversweber1109
      @wolfvonversweber1109 Год назад

      @@dannylojkovic9680 Hey. That's not necessarily correct. "Sehr angenehm" is a valid response to an introduction in German, it's just a bit old fashioned and/or formal, one could use it at a congress, bussiness meeting etc.
      "Schön >dich< kennenzulernen" is very informal and personal, it is common meeting friends of friends, young people at a party, fellow students etc.
      Meeting an adult stranger you'd normally say "schön >sie< kennenzulernen", "sie" being the formal respektful pronoun showing some distance, while "dich" expresses some more personal relationship or age

    • @wolfvonversweber1109
      @wolfvonversweber1109 Год назад +1

      It's even more interesting. Some words like "epes" exist almost the same in my regional dialect of German ("ebbes") , but don't exist in "proper" German. I had no problem understanding them, even though a few words didn't have a direct similarity to German.

  • @KirbyBWebb
    @KirbyBWebb 2 года назад +1

    I Am SO Surprised ! I never realized how much Yiddish has been used! This lesson is Fantastic and I am going to watch more . Thanks and Happy Hanukkah 🕎

  • @ioannisloukas4131
    @ioannisloukas4131 Год назад +1

    I like that you are explaining the culture behind the sentences

  • @Simply_put_it
    @Simply_put_it Год назад +1

    Very helpful and its been years since ive studied something but i want to learn

  • @cfchh1905
    @cfchh1905 Год назад

    Well done video - I will listen to them all.

  • @renatofigueiredo603
    @renatofigueiredo603 3 года назад +1

    A Dank. Execellent. You are very good professor Motl Didner. I'll continue learning Yiddish. Congratulations from Brazil.

  • @StephenRosenbach
    @StephenRosenbach 2 года назад +1

    Well done and very charming... a dank!

  • @AkulaShark4748
    @AkulaShark4748 3 года назад +3

    Thank you so much,lesson is really great and alive.
    תודה רבה

  • @MichelleCaplan
    @MichelleCaplan 3 года назад +3

    I love these lessons.

  • @jaffasholva7738
    @jaffasholva7738 3 года назад +4

    Wow, i never knew this language before and i can understand 90% of it because i am dutch, knowing a little german ?
    Seriously i am blown away haha

  • @rustyshackle8000
    @rustyshackle8000 2 года назад +4

    I really appreciate this! I was always curious about Yiddish, and was surprised to learn that it's very familiar to German. I'm also writing a story focusing on character that speak Yiddish and though I won't be writing it, I wanted to get a good feeling for how the language sounds

  • @gregorymccoy6797
    @gregorymccoy6797 2 года назад +2

    Loved the joke at the end.

  • @maxfullerton5228
    @maxfullerton5228 2 года назад +12

    Oh my god. Yiddish is so close to Pfälzisch(Southwestern German dialect). I understand every word they say. It's crazy.

    • @danr6175
      @danr6175 4 месяца назад

      Auch kinahore ;)?

  • @Biglake92
    @Biglake92 3 года назад +1

    You make it so easy to learn (lern) because of the humor. From my neck of the woods I grew up in, we were saying kenanhore 🥰

  • @NoName-rm7yq
    @NoName-rm7yq 3 года назад +2

    Zeyer gut!!!! - love it!

  • @georgesfotic550
    @georgesfotic550 4 месяца назад

    Compliments for your course !
    It is really interesting realize how much the jewish culture is plural and one at the same time.
    Yiddish, Ladino, Hebrew.. Ashkénaze, Séfarades .
    I learnt german at school in France as the second foreign language after english and serbian as the third.
    It is possible to understand some words in yiddish (I decided to learn) thanks to german.
    My older schwester who has been learning Hebrew for about 6 years offered me a Yiddish-french dictionnary very fruitful

  • @RikKorvemaker
    @RikKorvemaker Год назад +1

    Yiddish almost has a Luxembourgisch sound to it 🤩

  • @mollyblack369
    @mollyblack369 3 года назад +2

    this is awesome.

  • @Dr.RivkaEdery
    @Dr.RivkaEdery 3 года назад +2

    Brilliant! New subscriber 😁 the ending joke is so accurate 😂🤣

  • @deanfeldman2505
    @deanfeldman2505 2 года назад +2

    This is great!

  • @jessecrump7594
    @jessecrump7594 Год назад +1

    sounds like what i learned in germany in grade school when i lived there.

  • @devonn3278
    @devonn3278 4 года назад +3

    very fun! i noticed in the joke at the end you were using the word "kvetch" in regard to pressing the buttons, which reminded me that Safta used to call the button remote thing for opening her automatic garage door the "kvetcher." I'd forgotten that. thanks for the fun lesson and the little memory!

  • @mayanorton2096
    @mayanorton2096 Год назад

    So this was amazing.

  • @julioalexo
    @julioalexo Год назад

    G-d this is fantastic.

  • @auburnt2009
    @auburnt2009 3 года назад +3

    thank u so much. I would like to know some Yiddish. couldn't find a single audiobook for learning it at the local e-library. Yiddish needs to be preserved!

    • @nanushinthetube7065
      @nanushinthetube7065 Год назад +1

      English and Hebrew speaker. Love the takeoff on Hebrew words. It’s almost like pigeon Hebrew … wonderful lessons. Thank you!!!

  • @michaelbelford7596
    @michaelbelford7596 2 года назад +2

    My grandparents were from eastern Europe, Poland and Russia and spoke only yiddish.I would love to learn it ❤️

  • @maxfullerton5228
    @maxfullerton5228 2 года назад +3

    Epes hahahaha. Epes is also Pfälzisch(German Southwestern Dialect) for something.

  • @bernardwechsler4595
    @bernardwechsler4595 3 года назад +29

    I am from Romania. We spoke a slightly different dialect: git morgn, git yur, zehr git, vus, avoda, vus machstu, kinora, zai gezint ...

    • @danymann95
      @danymann95 Год назад +3

      Do you have any teaching resources, of this dialect I am also from Romania but never learn it properly

    • @Balagoola
      @Balagoola Год назад +3

      My grandparents came from present-day Ukraine and pronounced "u" like "ee", for example "geet" (good), "dee" (you), and "keeken" (to look).

    • @НаталияСмолина-ы3и
      @НаталияСмолина-ы3и Год назад +2

      Oh, its so nice that we have so many different variants of the language, but I am afraid one Day we Will forget this beautiful difrences.. 😔🙏

    • @fsilber330
      @fsilber330 Год назад +3

      Yes, many regional dialects; the two main dialect families being Litvish and Galitzianer. "Standard" Yiddish is a mixture not spoken by anyone, except maybe on the theater stage, and was encouraged for Yiddish literature. (Sort of like the case with standard high German, versus the various regional German dialects.)

    • @NorbertNahumEvreuklovic
      @NorbertNahumEvreuklovic 2 месяца назад

      We love ROMANIA💯💯

  • @maudvanderkloet8305
    @maudvanderkloet8305 Год назад +8

    I am Dutch and can easely understand Jiddish

    • @Jeppie_NL
      @Jeppie_NL 4 месяца назад +1

      Yes me too as a Dutch speaker

  • @gailreichman8712
    @gailreichman8712 Год назад

    This is so much fun!

  • @livingfallenangel
    @livingfallenangel Год назад +1

    shalom aleychum

  • @cem9753
    @cem9753 3 года назад +3

    groys aun mega shpas!

  • @jacksonsendrowitz9720
    @jacksonsendrowitz9720 3 года назад +1

    omg the ending joke is perfect

  • @tatjanasimonovic1943
    @tatjanasimonovic1943 9 месяцев назад

    I am not Jewish, but I adore Singer and his books. I am very interested to hear this language, and I would be happy if this language wouldn't die.
    I dont understand it, but it sounds a bit Dutch.

  • @luiscanociberasesor5316
    @luiscanociberasesor5316 2 года назад +3

    A DANK!!!!

  • @DeweyLauridsen5000
    @DeweyLauridsen5000 2 года назад

    I ABSOLUTELY love this series! My favorite word nowadays is "kinahore"! I recommend listening to "yiddish word of the day " with Mrs Schaechter. She is a mensch and a really smart lady to learn from. I'm kvellin to myself that I'm understanding so well and can speak plainly. Thanks FOLKSBIENE! Your mishtuppen DEWEY. Oy, I sound like a goy schlump with spilkis in my pipik! .😎😉👍

  • @wanny1397
    @wanny1397 8 месяцев назад

    As swiss german, i totally understand everything. Its just the same pronunciation but the writing is different. For example Ikh vil epes fregn we say ich or ih or ig vil öpis or epis frage but we say froge 😊 lovely language

  • @susygrynman9559
    @susygrynman9559 Год назад

    *Gracias Argentina*

  • @Autschbruv
    @Autschbruv 7 месяцев назад

    I stumbled upon this because i happened upon a yiddish video and not just understanding but recognizing pronunciation of platt spoken by people on the coast near the polish border
    Well at least the ones i am related to (at least in a way that matters to me) and before speculation i try to find evidence.
    I believe it could be either be caused by regional influences into the languages that caused this or personal and genetic history. Either way would be interested to know if theres any reasearch done into this kind of thing.

  • @Peace_seeker2390
    @Peace_seeker2390 2 года назад +3

    אַ דאַנק.

  • @nobodynohow8039
    @nobodynohow8039 Год назад

    What are the components of Yiddish? It all sounds so familiar. I heard a lot of Yiddish on TV growing up (lots of big Hollywood actors speak it), and I live in a city that has a Germantown, but have no other connection. It sounds like a mix of English and Latin/Romance language - volere (to want), for example-and Arabic. Not going to lie, I’m here because I was working on a conlang and Googled some phrases I thought I had created - only to find that they were real, proper Yiddish!

  • @Thereallouisjr
    @Thereallouisjr 11 месяцев назад

    My boy got Cuban cigars

  • @helenesilverman5186
    @helenesilverman5186 Год назад

    The same Yiddish as my parents from Radom area Poland

  • @moretorah2
    @moretorah2 2 года назад +1

    excellent

  • @dashriprock5720
    @dashriprock5720 6 месяцев назад

    I'm genuinely curious why the YKY is pronounced like someone is clearing their throat (sort of). I don't know how else to describe it.

  • @Ted-s_comments
    @Ted-s_comments Год назад +1

    tsvey mener fun khlm zaynen aroysgegangen shpatsirn, ven plutsim hot zikh ongehoybn tsu regenen.
    "gikh," hat eyner "efnt deyn shirem."
    "es vet nisht helfn," hat gezagt zeyn fraynd "mayn shirem iz ful mit holes."
    to vos hot ir dos gebrakht?
    "ikh hat nisht trakhtn es volt regn!"

    • @Lagolop
      @Lagolop 11 месяцев назад

      Nisht pishn oyf meyn fus un zog mir s'iz regn ... LOL.

  • @themishmish101
    @themishmish101 3 года назад +2

    Yidishe changed over time. Especially in America. A vinda , used to be a fenster. It's confusing because I used to go to schul with very old jewish survivors. Their yidish is different than what you teach . Also the accents

  • @interndana5599
    @interndana5599 2 года назад +3

    I didn't bring enough gum for everybody:(

  • @XiaoQiaoWu
    @XiaoQiaoWu 2 года назад +2

    A dank!

  • @Bettermedeluxe
    @Bettermedeluxe 2 года назад

    That Sound like german 🥶,i understand everything

  • @lauras7108
    @lauras7108 2 года назад +1

    I thought I was the only one who gets confused with "ver" for who and "vu" for where. It seems the other way around! 🙃

  • @annemburada6265
    @annemburada6265 4 года назад +3

    you comment the ...? ch hob nisht farstanen.

  • @CampfireStories_Podcast
    @CampfireStories_Podcast 2 года назад +1

    What dialect of Yiddish is this? I’m learning on Duolingo and some pronunciations are different. (i.e. דו is pronounced ‘dee’ and וווּ is pronounced ‘vee’)

    • @cory9170
      @cory9170 2 года назад +2

      This is fully explained in the previous episode (102): ruclips.net/video/z-U3HmwiXgU/видео.html

    • @CampfireStories_Podcast
      @CampfireStories_Podcast Год назад

      @@cory9170
      אַ דאַנק

  • @frankiefranklin9761
    @frankiefranklin9761 2 года назад +1

    Still surprised how much Yiddish I can understand from the German I know

    • @frankiefranklin9761
      @frankiefranklin9761 2 года назад +2

      Not that I could speak Yiddish but I can understand someone speaking it

  • @gayleearnhart8597
    @gayleearnhart8597 4 года назад +5

    we say vee instead of vu. why?

    • @motldidner1850
      @motldidner1850 4 года назад +12

      It is a dialect difference. In Galitsyaner, Voliner and Central Polish dialects (among others) the letter "vov" is pronounced "I" or "ee". In the Litvish dialect "vov" is pronounced "u". We are using the standardized "klal" dialect for this class. The standardized dialect attempts to be somewhere in the middle of the various Yiddish dialects and "vov" is pronounced as "u", like the Litvish.

    • @annemburada6265
      @annemburada6265 4 года назад +3

      many say git instead of gut...it's the i-dialect.

  • @renedupont1953
    @renedupont1953 2 года назад +1

    A question is also SHAILE and KASHE, but you have to know in which contexts these words are used. Unfortunately, the gentleman has an American accent; he sometimes says 'fregin' instead of FREGN (with a syllabic /n/). What is your name is also: VI RUFT MEN DIKH? or VI IZ DAIN NOMEN? He also pronounces 'morgen' instead of the correct MORGN (with a syllabic /n/).
    AF IDESH ZOGT MEN: AZ ME KEN NIT UN ME VEYST NIT, NEMT MEN ZEKH NIT UNTER.

  • @btuesday
    @btuesday 2 года назад +1

    Zeyer Gut

  • @andrerothweiler9191
    @andrerothweiler9191 2 года назад +2

    Good that I speak German

  • @Nabium
    @Nabium 11 месяцев назад +1

    As a English speaker I am shocked by how much I can understand from reading the subtitles. I can easily understand close to 90% of everything that was translated.

  • @braziltokyoschool
    @braziltokyoschool Год назад

    דאַנקען דיר זייער פיל וועגן דיין ווידעא!

  • @s1nful379
    @s1nful379 Год назад

    As an Afrikaans and Dutch speaker, I’m almost able to fully understand you. I’m sure the Germans could understand it better, but a lot of sorta sounding words.

  • @LegateMalpais
    @LegateMalpais Год назад +1

    The "how are you" answer reminds me or a jewish anecdote:
    - Is it true that jews answer one question with another?
    - Who said that?!

  • @angeladanzig8538
    @angeladanzig8538 2 месяца назад

    How is this Yiddish, ? I don't speak yiddish, I speak german. I understand every word.

    • @Folksbiene
      @Folksbiene  2 месяца назад

      Yiddish is a composite language which is largely based on Middle-High German, but also contains vocabulary and grammatical structures from Hebrew, Aramaic, Latin, old French, Polish, Russian and other Eastern European languages. Because they are closely related, speakers of Germanic languages (Modern German, Swedish, Dutch, Yiddish, etc) will hear familiar words and can possibly even understand one another. Keep watching 15 Minute Yiddish and you'll see where the languages differ.

  • @bartjuhbeekmans
    @bartjuhbeekmans 2 года назад +2

    It’s like German with the (plat) Dutch ‘G’ and generic Hebrew translated into phonetic similarities to Germanic languages in general (fuck the french lol).

    • @jennibaxter9588
      @jennibaxter9588 2 года назад +1

      No it’s not like German

    • @eugene-leveque
      @eugene-leveque 2 года назад +1

      Are you serious ? : "Fuck the French" : speak for yourself dirty dutch guy (and i'm polite).

    • @Lagolop
      @Lagolop 11 месяцев назад

      @@jennibaxter9588 Well, yiddish is based on Medieval High German so in that sense it is "germanic". Linguistically it is classified as a West Germanic language.

  • @sholem1382
    @sholem1382 3 года назад +3

    I’m looking for himish Yiddish not real Yiddish

  • @Ted-s_comments
    @Ted-s_comments Год назад

    a froy aoyf a ban iz tsugegangen tsu a man ibern tish antshuldikt, hot zi gezogt, ober bist eydish?
    "neyn," hot der mentsh geentfert.
    etlekhe minut shpeter di froy aumgekert antshuldikt, hot zi vider gezogt, bist zikher, az du bist nisht keyn eydish?
    "ikh bin zikher," hat der mentsh.
    aber di froy iz nisht geven ibertseygt, aun a far minut shfeter iz zi tsu im tsugekumen a drit mal "bist ir gor zikher az ir zent nisht eydish?" hat zi gefregt.
    "gut, gut," hot der mentsh gezogt "du gevinst. ikh bin eydish."
    "dos iz modne," hat gezagt di froy ir zet nisht aoys keyn eydisher."

  • @daoloth13
    @daoloth13 2 года назад

    Hi, I just found your video and it's very funny, I'm currently learning Hebrew for about two years and I have some questions for you....first of all does it help on learning Yiddish to know Hebrew??? Also I'm watching the Israeli series stishel on Netflix to help me at my Hebrew, is the Yiddish that you teach the same??? And how many variations of Yiddish do exist and what's their differences, can people with different Yiddish dialects communicate with each other??? Thank you.

    • @fsilber330
      @fsilber330 Год назад +1

      I learned quite a bit of German in school fifty years ago, so I thought I would learn Yiddish. I got only so far and reached a stumbling block -- about 10% of the words are of Hebrew origin (especially when spoken by religiously learned Jews). After a few decades of learning words from the Hebrew liturgy and Torah, I'm making much more progress with Yiddish.

  • @beritbranch2436
    @beritbranch2436 Месяц назад

    🍌

  • @Fernwald84
    @Fernwald84 4 года назад +2

    Shakespeare it's not. It's really much better!

  • @Daria-zn3xl
    @Daria-zn3xl 2 года назад +2

    this is german.. lol

  • @piotrwiara1564
    @piotrwiara1564 2 года назад +2

    I hate german words in Yiddish !

    • @eberdemelos.j9770
      @eberdemelos.j9770 2 года назад +2

      👍🏽

    • @Lagolop
      @Lagolop 11 месяцев назад

      If you removed all the Germanic words in the English, it would no longer be a language, because 80% of the words are German.

  • @6ftcheeseburger384
    @6ftcheeseburger384 Год назад

    Huh, the verb conjugations remind me of spanish fsmr